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Spain Explained

Spain Explained

By: Marti Buckley
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Spain Explained is the podcast for people who want to understand Spanish culture, Spanish food, and Spanish traditions beyond the guidebook basics. Hosted by award-winning author and cook Marti Buckley, who's lived in Spain since 2010, this show unpacks the concepts, rituals, and quirks that make Spain… Spain. Whether you're planning a trip to Spain, obsessed with Spanish cuisine, dreaming of moving there, or just curious why lunch can last four hours, this podcast translates the untranslatable. Each episode dives into one single part of Spanish life, from sobremesa to siesta, café con leche to jamón ibérico, and explains what it is and why it matters. Marti is the author of cookbooks including The Book of Pintxos and Basque Country, writes for Condé Nast Traveler, The Telegraph, and Food & Wine,, and founded the International Society for the Preservation and Enjoyment of Vermouth. She's your insider guide to Spanish culture, Spanish daily life, and Spanish food traditions. This podcast is about understanding why Spain works the way it does. Perfect for Spain lovers, travelers, expats, and anyone who's wondered why Spaniards eat dinner at 10pm. New episodes weekly covering Spanish food culture, daily life in Spain, regional traditions, and the quirks of living in Spain.2026 Art Cooking Food & Wine Social Sciences Travel Writing & Commentary
Episodes
  • What is an Asador? (EP 24)
    Jun 30 2026

    A restaurant in Segovia has spent nearly a century proving the tenderness of its roast suckling pig by carving it with the edge of a plate instead of a knife. That gesture made the dish famous, and it is just one piece of a much older story: the Spanish asador, the institution that turned roasting meat and fish over fire into one of the country's defining culinary traditions.

    So what is an asador? What are the different types? Which ones are the best? This episode traces that history from the medieval migrations that built Castilla's roasting culture, through the Argentine influence behind Basque and Galician grilling, into the very different paths each region took with fire. It closes with the restaurants keeping the tradition alive today, from a 124-year-old asador still in operation to one of the most influential grill kitchens in the world.

    If you want more Spain content: ∙ Subscribe to Marti's Substack at https://substack.com/@martibuckley ∙ Follow her on Instagram @martibuckley ∙ Visit her blog at travelcookeat.com

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    26 mins
  • What is Vale? (EP 23)
    Jun 23 2026

    This episode is devoted to a single, four-letter word that you'll hear a LOT in Spain: vale. What does it mean, when is it used, and why is the answer … just about all the time for anything? This episode traces the full arc of vale, from its Latin roots meaning "be well," through its centuries as a formal Spanish farewell, and into its modern role as the Spanish equivalent of "okay."

    Along the way: the mid-20th century shift in meaning, the furious linguist who called out its "coarsened, repetitive hammering," and the moment the Real Academia Española made the deliberate choice to formalize vale over the English import. Plus the geographic divide between Spain and Latin America, the mechanics of ¿vale?, ya vale, and the three-word phone goodbye that compresses an entire conversation into six syllables.

    If you want more about Spain:
    Subscribe to the Substack at https://substack.com/@martibuckley
    Follow on Instagram at https://www.instagram.com/martibuckley
    Visit the blog at https://travelcookeat.com

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    15 mins
  • What is Tinto de Verano? (EP 22)
    Jun 16 2026

    Forget sangria...tinto de verano is Spain's true summer drink. In this episode, we break down tinto de verano: what it actually is, the correct ratio of ice and the mixer, where it came from, and why it's THE drink. Literally "summer red wine." And it does exactly what it says. Red wine, carbonated mixer, a lot of ice, and usually a slice of lemon. That's the whole thing. We go into the origin story, which leads us to Córdoba in the 1920s, a roadside flamenco tavern, a man named Federico Vargas Madero, and a second, competing theory. Find out what gaseosa actually is and why La Casera's 1960s advertising slogan became a phrase people still use in everyday Spanish conversation.

    If you want more about Spain:
    ∙ Subscribe to Marti's Substack at https://substack.com/@martibuckley
    ∙ Follow her on Instagram @martibuckley
    ∙ Visit her blog at travelcookeat.com

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    18 mins
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